The crisis of health workforce lies at the core of the crisis of health
care systems, as a global shortage of health workers is becoming
critical in most countries. The nexus between the crises in health care
systems and in health in general has become a vicious cycle. The
importance of strengthening health systems has been neglected for a
long time as the societies tend more to invest in technologies and
drugs and not in social protection, health systems or people.
Corollary, often the pressure from health budget constraints has been
aggravated by the misallocation of resources within health systems,
where money is being spent on the purchase of high-tech medical
equipment rather than on human resources (PSI, 2004).
The
global health workers shortage is an obvious threat to health systems.
Three decades of "reforms" have treated health workers as a burden
rather than as an asset. Health workers is many parts of the poor world
were harder hit as they were at the same time under pressure due to
three main factors: lack of investment, the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and
migration, the latter being accelerated as a result of the first two
factors. Health workers in many countries of the developed world have
also seen a continues deterioration of their working life characterised
by job satisfaction problems such as inadequate staffing, heavy
work-loads, the increased use of overtime, a lack of sufficient support
staff, inadequacy of wages and by too few workers training as nurses.
Indeed,
the crisis of the health workforce as expressed by the flow of health
workers across national boundaries is one of the strong indicators of
the crises of health systems.